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How Liquid-Cooled Pcs Work: Laptop

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1.

How Liquid-cooled PCs


Work


BY TRACY V. V. WILSON

A liquid-cooled PC in a clear case. See more computer hardware pictures.


IMAGE COURTESY DARRIN GATEWOOD

Whether you're using a desktop or laptop computer, there's a good chance that if you stop
what you're doing and listen carefully, you'll hear the whirring of a small fan. If your
computer has a high-end video card and lots of processing power, you might even hear
more than one.

In most computers, fans do a pretty good job of keeping electronic components cool. But
for people who want to use high-end hardware or coax their PCs into running faster, a fan
might not have enough power for the job. If a computer generates too much heat, liquid
cooling, also known as water cooling, can be a better solution. It might seem a little
counterintuitive to put liquids near delicate electronic equipment, but cooling with water
is far more efficient than cooling with air.

A liquid-cooling system for a PC works a lot like the cooling system of a car. Both take
advantage of a basic principle of thermodynamics - that heat moves from warmer
objects to cooler objects. As the cooler object gets warmer, the warmer object gets cooler.
You can experience this principle firsthand by putting your hand flat on a cool spot on
your desk for several seconds. When you lift your hand, your palm will be a little cooler,
and the spot where your hand was will be a little warmer.

Liquid cooling is a very common process. A car's cooling system circulates water,
usually mixed with antifreeze, through the engine. Hot surfaces in the engine warm the
water, cooling themselves off in the process.

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Click on "Start" to see the fluid flow through the engine as the engine warms up.

The water circulates from the engine to the radiator, a system of fins and tubes with a lot
of exterior surface area. Heat moves from the hot water to the radiator, causing the water
to cool off. The cool water then heads back to the engine. At the same time, a fan moves
air over the outside of the radiator. The radiator warms the air, cooling itself off at the
same time. In this way, the engine's heat moves out of the cooling system and into the
surrounding air. Without the radiator's surfaces making contact with the air and dispelling
the heat, the system would just move the heat around instead of getting rid of it.

A car engine generates heat as a byproduct of burning fuel. Computer components, on the
other hand, generate heat as a byproduct of moving electrons around. A
computer's microchips are full of electrical transistors, which are basically electrical
switches that are either on or off. As transistors change their states between on and
off, electricity moves around in the microchip. The more transistors a chip contains and
the faster they change states, the hotter the chip gets. Like a car engine, if the chip gets
too hot, it will fail.
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